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EU practices acrobatics with Caspian gas flip-flop

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  • EU practices acrobatics with Caspian gas flip-flop

    http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Central_Asia/MD01Ag01.html

    EU practices acrobatics with Caspian gas flip-flop
    By Robert M Cutler

    MONTREAL - The changing geo-economic environment around the Central
    Asian and South Caucasus hydrocarbon energy producers is reflected in
    a public flip-flop by a major European Union official this week.

    At a news conference in Berlin, European Union Energy Commissioner
    Gunther Oettinger, who last November became the first EU figure to
    admit that the EU-sponsored Nabucco and Russian-sponsored South Stream
    gas pipeline projects were rivals, reversed course and declared they
    were not actually competing projects.

    Nabucco seeks to take gas from the Caspian Sea region through Turkey
    to Southeast and Central Europe. Russia seeks to lay the South Stream
    pipeline across the bed of the Black Sea to the Balkans, although its
    Prime Minister Vladimir Putin is ready to scrap the project if he can
    find another way to block Nabucco. (See Compressed gas on the Caspian
    table, Asia Times Online, March 25, 2011.)

    Saying that the EU positively evaluates Russia's contribution to
    European energy security, Oettinger publicly asked Russia not to put
    pressure on Central Asian countries against participation in the
    Nabucco project. Oettinger said that the EU's Southern Gas Corridor
    (SGC), a program adopted in May 2009 to channel natural gas to Europe
    from the Caspian Sea basin through Turkey and under the Black Sea,
    rather than through Russia, was simply the shortest route. (See
    Nabucco is still alive, Asia Times Online, July 3, 2009.)

    It was an odd performance, of which the main purpose may have been to
    conform to the new EU line that economics, not politics, will
    determine European preferences over natural gas pipelines from Central
    Asia. In this connection, a high-level Azerbaijani figure publicly
    disclosed last week that his government was working on two documents
    with Turkmenistan with a view towards facilitating the construction of
    a Trans-Caspian Gas Pipeline (TCGP).

    The first document is a political declaration in which the two
    countries affirm that they are ready to assist in creating the SGC.
    The second would define more specifically the rights and
    responsibilities of the two countries with respect to the physical
    project construction, including legal provisions.

    The latter document in particular signifies that there is definite and
    specific progress in creating the conditions for overcoming the
    territorial disagreement between Azerbaijan and Turkmenistan over
    delimitation of subsoil Caspian Sea mineral and energy rights sectors.

    The press leak to the media comes three weeks after Azerbaijan's
    parliament ratified a declaration that its government had signed with
    the EU on the SGC project.

    There are hints that Russia is not the only player discontent with the
    specific pipelines that the EU has defined for inclusion in the SGC.
    These are: Nabucco; White Stream, which would go under the Black Sea
    from Georgia to Romania; and the Italy-Turkey-Greece Interconnector.
    For example, the British firm BP has suggested that it might prefer to
    evacuate 10 billion cubic meters per year (bcm/y) of gas from
    Azerbaijan's Shah Deniz Two deposit by some route other than Nabucco.

    The implication is that BP would like to build another string of the
    South Caucasus Pipeline (running from Baku through Georgia into
    Turkey), of which the throughput volume is 8 bcm/y but which is not
    filled entirely to capacity. BP has in mind to transit this gas to
    southern Italy through Turkey and the Trans-Adriatic Pipeline (TAP).
    (See Nabucco, and Baku, filling up on gas, Asia Times Online, May 14,
    2010.)

    The reason behind this is the fact that BP's other major partner in
    Shah Deniz, the Norwegian firm Statoil owning 25.5% of that
    development, also owns 42.5% of the TAP project, which is planned to
    transit Greece and Albania, then passing under the Adriatic Sea to
    reach southeastern Italy.

    However, it is not certain that this idea by itself would be better
    received in Baku than the Nabucco route. That is because it does not
    make clear that Azerbaijan would own the gas for sale in addition to
    merely supplying it. For Azerbaijan has made it clear that it wishes
    not only to supply gas to Nabucco but also to sell gas to countries
    along the route to Austria (ie, Bulgaria, Romania, and Hungary).

    Moreover, Azerbaijan also wants to be able to sell to adjacent
    countries in the region such as Albania, Croatia, the Czech Republic,
    Macedonia, Slovakia, and so forth. Indeed, these countries in general
    are those with the greatest gas dependence on limited number of
    sources.

    This possibility could be implemented through a series of relatively
    inexpensive interconnectors to create a gas ring in the region. The
    European Commission (EC) adopted such a decision in principle nearly
    three years ago, calling it a "supergrid" project permitting members
    states to share electric power from different sources.

    However, like so many policy initiatives born in Brussels, the
    implementation is the prerogative of the national governments, which
    may have their own motives for ignoring the suggestions or adopting
    them only in part. Moreover, due to industrial history in the energy
    sector, such interconnectors for a gas ring are much easier to
    implement in Southeast and Central Europe than among, for example, the
    founding members of the European Economic Community from the 1950s.

    If the EU cannot find itself able to provide a window for funding such
    projects, then the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development
    (EBRD) should step in through its well-established cooperation with
    the Central European Initiative (CEI) and the CEI's Secretariat as
    well as with the associated Central European Chambers of Commerce
    Initiative.

    Indeed, under the EBRD's aegis, the CEI is already involved in five
    EU-funded projects, including a "transport axis coordination" project
    in Southeast Europe. The fact that Azerbaijan is able to make and
    stick to a demand to be the seller of its own gas in Southeast and
    Central Europe is in radical contrast to its relative powerlessness in
    negotiations with Western energy majors in the 1990s.

    The emergence of the country's relative autonomy and its capacity to
    assert its own interests with at least some success reflect the
    beginning of the unfolding of a new phase of energy geo-economics in
    the region, to which I pointed over a year ago. (See A delicate dance
    of power, Asia Times Online, December 24, 2009.)

    Dr Robert M Cutler, educated at the Massachusetts Institute of
    Technology and The University of Michigan, has researched and taught
    at universities in the United States, Canada, France, Switzerland, and
    Russia. Now senior research fellow in the Institute of European,
    Russian and Eurasian Studies, Carleton University, Canada, he also
    consults privately in a variety of fields.




    From: A. Papazian
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